When 1819ad327b (grep: fix multibyte regex handling under macOS,
2022-08-26) started to use the native regex library instead of Git's
own (compat/regex/), it lost support for alternation in basic
regular expressions.
Bring it back by enabling the flag REG_ENHANCED on macOS when
compiling basic regular expressions.
Reported-by: Marco Nenciarini <marco.nenciarini@enterprisedb.com>
Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In df5218b4c3 (config.mak.uname: support MSys2, 2016-01-13), we
introduced support for building Git for Windows in the then-brand new
Git for Windows v2.x build environment that was based off of MSYS2.
To do that, we split the non-msysGit part (that targeted MSys1) in two,
and instead of sharing the `NO_CURL = YesPlease` setting with MSys1, we
overrode it for MSYS2 with the empty value because we very much want to
build Git for Windows with libcurl.
But that was unnecessary: we never set that variable beforehand,
therefore there is no need to override it.
Let's just remove that unnecessary line.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In f9206ce268 (mingw: let's use gettext with MSYS2, 2016-01-26), we
flipped the switch to build Git for Windows with support for gettext.
However, the way we flipped the switch was by changing the value of the
`NO_GETTEXT` variable from a non-empty string to the empty string, as if
there was any `NO_GETTEXT` definition we needed to override.
But that was a mistake: while there _is_ a definition, it is in the
`THIS_IS_MSYSGIT` section, i.e. it does not affect the Git for Windows
part at all.
Let's just remove that unnecessary line.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While Git for Windows does not _ship_ Python (in order to save on
bandwidth), MSYS2 provides very fine Python interpreters that users can
easily take advantage of, by using Git for Windows within its SDK.
Previously, we excluded the Python bits, mostly due to historical
reasons: In the Git for Windows v1.x days, we built Git using
MSys/MinGW, without support for any Python scripts.
Therefore, let's move out the `NO_PYTHON` definition from the generic
part of the MINGW section (which includes special handling for MSYS2/Git
for Windows, for the long-superseded msysGit environment, as well as for
the setup of probably just one developer remaining with their MSys1)
into the two sections that cover different environments than Git for
Windows' SDK.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
More fsmonitor--daemon.
* jh/builtin-fsmonitor-part3: (30 commits)
t7527: improve implicit shutdown testing in fsmonitor--daemon
fsmonitor--daemon: allow --super-prefix argument
t7527: test Unicode NFC/NFD handling on MacOS
t/lib-unicode-nfc-nfd: helper prereqs for testing unicode nfc/nfd
t/helper/hexdump: add helper to print hexdump of stdin
fsmonitor: on macOS also emit NFC spelling for NFD pathname
t7527: test FSMonitor on case insensitive+preserving file system
fsmonitor: never set CE_FSMONITOR_VALID on submodules
t/perf/p7527: add perf test for builtin FSMonitor
t7527: FSMonitor tests for directory moves
fsmonitor: optimize processing of directory events
fsm-listen-darwin: shutdown daemon if worktree root is moved/renamed
fsm-health-win32: force shutdown daemon if worktree root moves
fsm-health-win32: add polling framework to monitor daemon health
fsmonitor--daemon: stub in health thread
fsmonitor--daemon: rename listener thread related variables
fsmonitor--daemon: prepare for adding health thread
fsmonitor--daemon: cd out of worktree root
fsm-listen-darwin: ignore FSEvents caused by xattr changes on macOS
unpack-trees: initialize fsmonitor_has_run_once in o->result
...
Extend generic incompatibility checkout with platform-specific
mechanism. Stub in Win32 version.
In the existing fsmonitor-settings code we have a way to mark
types of repos as incompatible with fsmonitor (whether via the
hook and IPC APIs). For example, we do this for bare repos,
since there are no files to watch.
Extend this exclusion mechanism for platform-specific reasons.
This commit just creates the framework and adds a stub for Win32.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Built-in fsmonitor (part 2).
* jh/builtin-fsmonitor-part2: (30 commits)
t7527: test status with untracked-cache and fsmonitor--daemon
fsmonitor: force update index after large responses
fsmonitor--daemon: use a cookie file to sync with file system
fsmonitor--daemon: periodically truncate list of modified files
t/perf/p7519: add fsmonitor--daemon test cases
t/perf/p7519: speed up test on Windows
t/perf/p7519: fix coding style
t/helper/test-chmtime: skip directories on Windows
t/perf: avoid copying builtin fsmonitor files into test repo
t7527: create test for fsmonitor--daemon
t/helper/fsmonitor-client: create IPC client to talk to FSMonitor Daemon
help: include fsmonitor--daemon feature flag in version info
fsmonitor--daemon: implement handle_client callback
compat/fsmonitor/fsm-listen-darwin: implement FSEvent listener on MacOS
compat/fsmonitor/fsm-listen-darwin: add MacOS header files for FSEvent
compat/fsmonitor/fsm-listen-win32: implement FSMonitor backend on Windows
fsmonitor--daemon: create token-based changed path cache
fsmonitor--daemon: define token-ids
fsmonitor--daemon: add pathname classification
fsmonitor--daemon: implement 'start' command
...
Replace core.fsyncObjectFiles with two new configuration variables,
core.fsync and core.fsyncMethod.
* ns/core-fsyncmethod:
core.fsync: documentation and user-friendly aggregate options
core.fsync: new option to harden the index
core.fsync: add configuration parsing
core.fsync: introduce granular fsync control infrastructure
core.fsyncmethod: add writeout-only mode
wrapper: make inclusion of Windows csprng header tightly scoped
Stub in empty implementation of fsmonitor--daemon
backend for Darwin (aka MacOS).
Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Stub in empty filesystem listener backend for fsmonitor--daemon on Windows.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit introduces the `core.fsyncMethod` configuration
knob, which can currently be set to `fsync` or `writeout-only`.
The new writeout-only mode attempts to tell the operating system to
flush its in-memory page cache to the storage hardware without issuing a
CACHE_FLUSH command to the storage controller.
Writeout-only fsync is significantly faster than a vanilla fsync on
common hardware, since data is written to a disk-side cache rather than
all the way to a durable medium. Later changes in this patch series will
take advantage of this primitive to implement batching of hardware
flushes.
When git_fsync is called with FSYNC_WRITEOUT_ONLY, it may fail and the
caller is expected to do an ordinary fsync as needed.
On Apple platforms, the fsync system call does not issue a CACHE_FLUSH
directive to the storage controller. This change updates fsync to do
fcntl(F_FULLFSYNC) to make fsync actually durable. We maintain parity
with existing behavior on Apple platforms by setting the default value
of the new core.fsyncMethod option.
Signed-off-by: Neeraj Singh <neerajsi@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The $(QUIET) variables we define are largely duplicated between our
various Makefiles, let's define them in the new "shared.mak" instead.
Since we're not using the environment to pass these around we don't
need to export the "QUIET_GEN" and "QUIET_BUILT_IN" variables
anymore. The "QUIET_GEN" variable is used in "git-gui/Makefile" and
"gitweb/Makefile", but they've got their own definition for those. The
"QUIET_BUILT_IN" variable is only used in the top-level "Makefile". We
still need to export the "V" variable.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The build procedure has been taught to notice older version of zlib
and enable our replacement uncompress2() automatically.
* ab/auto-detect-zlib-compress2:
compat: auto-detect if zlib has uncompress2()
Pick a better random number generator and use it when we prepare
temporary filenames.
* bc/csprng-mktemps:
wrapper: use a CSPRNG to generate random file names
wrapper: add a helper to generate numbers from a CSPRNG
We have a copy of uncompress2() implementation in compat/ so that we
can build with an older version of zlib that lack the function, and
the build procedure selects if it is used via the NO_UNCOMPRESS2
$(MAKE) variable. This is yet another "annoying" knob the porters
need to tweak on platforms that are not common enough to have the
default set in the config.mak.uname file.
Attempt to instead ask the system header <zlib.h> to decide if we
need the compatibility implementation. This is a deviation from the
way we have been handling the "compatiblity" features so far, and if
it can be done cleanly enough, it could work as a model for features
that need compatibility definition we discover in the future. With
that goal in mind, avoid expedient but ugly hacks, like shoving the
code that is conditionally compiled into an unrelated .c file, which
may not work in future cases---instead, take an approach that uses a
file that is independently compiled and stands on its own.
Compile and link compat/zlib-uncompress2.c file unconditionally, but
conditionally hide the implementation behind #if/#endif when zlib
version is 1.2.9 or newer, and unconditionally archive the resulting
object file in the libgit.a to be picked up by the linker.
There are a few things to note in the shape of the code base after
this change:
- We no longer use NO_UNCOMPRESS2 knob; if the system header
<zlib.h> claims a version that is more cent than the library
actually is, this would break, but it is easy to add it back when
we find such a system.
- The object file compat/zlib-uncompress2.o is always compiled and
archived in libgit.a, just like a few other compat/ object files
already are.
- The inclusion of <zlib.h> is done in <git-compat-util.h>; we used
to do so from <cache.h> which includes <git-compat-util.h> as the
first thing it does, so from the *.c codes, there is no practical
change.
- Until objects in libgit.a that is already used gains a reference
to the function, the reftable code will be the only one that
wants it, so libgit.a on the linker command line needs to appear
once more at the end to satisify the mutual dependency.
- Beat found a trick used by OpenSSL to avoid making the
conditionally-compiled object truly empty (apparently because
they had to deal with compilers that do not want to see an
effectively empty input file). Our compat/zlib-uncompress2.c
file borrows the same trick for portabilty.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Adjust build on RHEL 7 to explicitly ask C99 support and use
the fallback implementation of uncompress2 we ship.
* da/rhel7-lacks-uncompress2-and-c99:
build: centos/RHEL 7 ships with an older gcc and zlib
There are many situations in which having access to a cryptographically
secure pseudorandom number generator (CSPRNG) is helpful. In the
future, we'll encounter one of these when dealing with temporary files.
To make this possible, let's add a function which reads from a system
CSPRNG and returns some bytes.
We know that all systems will have such an interface. A CSPRNG is
required for a secure TLS or SSH implementation and a Git implementation
which provided neither would be of little practical use. In addition,
POSIX is set to standardize getentropy(2) in the next version, so in the
(potentially distant) future we can rely on that.
For systems which lack one of the other interfaces, we provide the
ability to use OpenSSL's CSPRNG. OpenSSL is highly portable and
functions on practically every known OS, and we know it will have access
to some source of cryptographically secure randomness. We also provide
support for the arc4random in libbsd for folks who would prefer to use
that.
Because this is a security sensitive interface, we take some
precautions. We either succeed by filling the buffer completely as we
requested, or we fail. We don't return partial data because the caller
will almost never find that to be a useful behavior.
Specify a makefile knob which users can use to specify one or more
suitable CSPRNGs, and turn the multiple string options into a set of
defines, since we cannot match on strings in the preprocessor. We allow
multiple options to make the job of handling this in autoconf easier.
The order of options is important here. On systems with arc4random,
which is most of the BSDs, we use that, since, except on MirBSD and
macOS, it uses ChaCha20, which is extremely fast, and sits entirely in
userspace, avoiding a system call. We then prefer getrandom over
getentropy, because the former has been available longer on Linux, and
then OpenSSL. Finally, if none of those are available, we use
/dev/urandom, because most Unix-like operating systems provide that API.
We prefer options that don't involve device files when possible because
those work in some restricted environments where device files may not be
available.
Set the configuration variables appropriately for Linux and the BSDs,
including macOS, as well as Windows and NonStop. We specifically only
consider versions which receive publicly available security support
here. For the same reason, we don't specify getrandom(2) on Linux,
because CentOS 7 doesn't support it in glibc (although its kernel does)
and we don't want to resort to making syscalls.
Finally, add a test helper to allow this to be tested by hand and in
tests. We don't add any tests, since invoking the CSPRNG is not likely
to produce interesting, reproducible results.
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
GCC 4.8.5 is the default system compiler on centos7/RHEL7.
This version requires -std=c99 to enable c99 support.
zlib 1.2.7 on centos7/rhel7 lacks uncompress2().
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Notably, it lacks uncompress2(); use the fallback we ship in our
tree instead.
Signed-off-by: Randall S. Becker <rsbecker@nexbridge.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "reftable" backend for the refs API, without integrating into
the refs subsystem, has been added.
* hn/reftable:
Add "test-tool dump-reftable" command.
reftable: add dump utility
reftable: implement stack, a mutable database of reftable files.
reftable: implement refname validation
reftable: add merged table view
reftable: add a heap-based priority queue for reftable records
reftable: reftable file level tests
reftable: read reftable files
reftable: generic interface to tables
reftable: write reftable files
reftable: a generic binary tree implementation
reftable: reading/writing blocks
Provide zlib's uncompress2 from compat/zlib-compat.c
reftable: (de)serialization for the polymorphic record type.
reftable: add blocksource, an abstraction for random access reads
reftable: utility functions
reftable: add error related functionality
reftable: add LICENSE
hash.h: provide constants for the hash IDs
Remove the sane_grep() shell function in git-sh-setup. The two reasons
for why it existed don't apply anymore:
1. It was added due to GNU grep supporting GREP_OPTIONS. See
e1622bfcba (Protect scripted Porcelains from GREP_OPTIONS insanity,
2009-11-23).
Newer versions of GNU grep ignore that, but even on older versions
its existence won't matter, none of these sane_grep() uses care
about grep's output, they're merely using it to check if a string
exists in a file or stream. We also don't care about the "LC_ALL=C"
that "sane_grep" was using, these greps for fixed or ASCII strings
will behave the same under any locale.
2. The SANE_TEXT_GREP added in 71b401032b (sane_grep: pass "-a" if
grep accepts it, 2016-03-08) isn't needed either, none of these grep
uses deal with binary data.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Mostly preliminary clean-up in the hook API.
* ab/config-based-hooks-1:
hook-list.h: add a generated list of hooks, like config-list.h
hook.c users: use "hook_exists()" instead of "find_hook()"
hook.c: add a hook_exists() wrapper and use it in bugreport.c
hook.[ch]: move find_hook() from run-command.c to hook.c
Makefile: remove an out-of-date comment
Makefile: don't perform "mv $@+ $@" dance for $(GENERATED_H)
Makefile: stop hardcoding {command,config}-list.h
Makefile: mark "check" target as .PHONY
This will be needed for reading reflog blocks in reftable.
Helped-by: Carlo Marcelo Arenas Belón <carenas@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Han-Wen Nienhuys <hanwen@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
6a8cbc41ba (developer: enable pedantic by default, 2021-09-03)
enables pedantic mode in as many compilers as possible to help gather
feedback on future tightening, so lets do so.
-Wpedantic is missing in some really old gcc 4 versions so lets restrict
it to gcc5 and clang4 (it does work in clang3 AFAIK, but it will be
unlikely that a developer will use such an old compiler anyway).
MinGW gcc is the only one which has -Wno-pedantic-ms-format, and while
that is available also in older compilers, the Windows SDK provides gcc10
so lets aim for that.
Note that in order to target the flag to only Windows, additional changes
were needed in config.mak.uname to propagate the OS detection which also
did some minor refactoring, but which is functionaly equivalent.
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Carlo Marcelo Arenas Belón <carenas@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Change various places that hardcode the names of these two files to
refer to either $(GENERATED_H), or to a new generated-hdrs
target. That target is consistent with the *-objs targets I recently
added in 029bac01a8 (Makefile: add {program,xdiff,test,git,fuzz}-objs
& objects targets, 2021-02-23).
A subsequent commit will add a new generated hook-list.h. By doing
this refactoring we'll only need to add the new file to the
GENERATED_H variable, not EXCEPT_HDRS, the vcbuild/README etc.
Hardcoding command-list.h there seems to have been a case of
copy/paste programming in 976aaedca0 (msvc: add a Makefile target to
pre-generate the Visual Studio solution, 2019-07-29). The
config-list.h was added later in 709df95b78 (help: move
list_config_help to builtin/help, 2020-04-16).
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
trace2 logs learned to show parent process name to see in what
context Git was invoked.
* es/trace2-log-parent-process-name:
tr2: log parent process name
tr2: make process info collection platform-generic
It can be useful to tell who invoked Git - was it invoked manually by a
user via CLI or script? By an IDE? In some cases - like 'repo' tool -
we can influence the source code and set the GIT_TRACE2_PARENT_SID
environment variable from the caller process. In 'repo''s case, that
parent SID is manipulated to include the string "repo", which means we
can positively identify when Git was invoked by 'repo' tool. However,
identifying parents that way requires both that we know which tools
invoke Git and that we have the ability to modify the source code of
those tools. It cannot scale to keep up with the various IDEs and
wrappers which use Git, most of which we don't know about. Learning
which tools and wrappers invoke Git, and how, would give us insight to
decide where to improve Git's usability and performance.
Unfortunately, there's no cross-platform reliable way to gather the name
of the parent process. If procfs is present, we can use that; otherwise
we will need to discover the name another way. However, the process ID
should be sufficient to look up the process name on most platforms, so
that code may be shareable.
Git for Windows gathers similar information and logs it as a "data_json"
event. However, since "data_json" has a variable format, it is difficult
to parse effectively in some languages; instead, let's pursue a
dedicated "cmd_ancestry" event to record information about the ancestry
of the current process and a consistent, parseable way.
Git for Windows also gathers information about more than one generation
of parent. In Linux further ancestry info can be gathered with procfs,
but it's unwieldy to do so. In the interest of later moving Git for
Windows ancestry logging to the 'cmd_ancestry' event, and in the
interest of later adding more ancestry to the Linux implementation - or
of adding this functionality to other platforms which have an easier
time walking the process tree - let's make 'cmd_ancestry' accept an
array of parentage.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
To pave the way for non-Windows platforms to define
trace2_collect_process_info(), reorganize the stub-or-definition schema
to something which doesn't directly reference Windows.
Platforms which want to collect parent process information in the
future should:
1. Add an implementation to compat/ (e.g. compat/somearch/procinfo.c)
2. Add that object to COMPAT_OBJS to config.mak.uname
(e.g. COMPAT_OBJS += compat/somearch/procinfo.o)
3. Define HAVE_PLATFORM_PROCINFO in config.mak.uname
In the Windows case, this definition lives in
compat/win32/trace2_win32_process_info.c, which is already conditionally
added to COMPAT_OBJS; so let's add HAVE_PLATFORM_PROCINFO to hint to the
build that compat/stub/procinfo.c should not be used.
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Git for Windows' prefix is `/mingw64/` (or `/mingw32/` for 32-bit
versions), therefore the system config is located at the clunky location
`C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\etc\gitconfig`.
This moves the system config into a more logical location: the `mingw64`
part of `C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\etc\gitconfig` never made sense,
as it is a mere implementation detail. Let's skip the `mingw64` part and
move this to `C:\Program Files\Git\etc\gitconfig`.
Side note: in the rare (and not recommended) case a user chooses to
install 32-bit Git for Windows on a 64-bit system, the path will of
course be `C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\etc\gitconfig`.
Background: During the Git for Windows v1.x days, the system config was
located at `C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\etc\gitconfig`. With Git for
Windows v2.x, it moved to `C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\gitconfig` (or
`C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\mingw32\gitconfig`). Rather than fixing it
back then, we tried to introduce a "Windows-wide" config, but that never
caught on.
Likewise, we move the system `gitattributes` into the same directory.
Obviously, we are cautious to do this only for the known install
locations `/mingw64` and `/mingw32`; If anybody wants to override that
while building their version of Git (e.g. via `make prefix=$HOME`), we
leave the default location of the system config and gitattributes alone.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A simple IPC interface gets introduced to build services like
fsmonitor on top.
* jh/simple-ipc:
t0052: add simple-ipc tests and t/helper/test-simple-ipc tool
simple-ipc: add Unix domain socket implementation
unix-stream-server: create unix domain socket under lock
unix-socket: disallow chdir() when creating unix domain sockets
unix-socket: add backlog size option to unix_stream_listen()
unix-socket: eliminate static unix_stream_socket() helper function
simple-ipc: add win32 implementation
simple-ipc: design documentation for new IPC mechanism
pkt-line: add options argument to read_packetized_to_strbuf()
pkt-line: add PACKET_READ_GENTLE_ON_READ_ERROR option
pkt-line: do not issue flush packets in write_packetized_*()
pkt-line: eliminate the need for static buffer in packet_write_gently()
Create Windows implementation of "simple-ipc" using named pipes.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Work around platforms whose open() is reported to return EINTR (it
shouldn't, as we do our signals with SA_RESTART).
* jk/open-returns-eintr:
config.mak.uname: enable OPEN_RETURNS_EINTR for macOS Big Sur
Makefile: add OPEN_RETURNS_EINTR knob
We've had mixed reports on whether the latest release of macOS needs
this Makefile knob set. In most reported cases, there's antivirus
software running (which one might imagine could cause an open() call to
be delayed). However, one of the (off-list) reports I've gotten
indicated that it happened on an otherwise clean install of Big Sur.
Since the symptom is so bad (checkout randomly fails to write several
fails when the progress meter kicks in), and since the workaround is so
lightweight (if we don't see EINTR, it's just an extra conditional
check), let's just turn it on by default.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Remove a flag added in my fb95e2e38d (grep: un-break building with
PCRE >= 8.32 without --enable-jit, 2017-06-01). It's set just below
USE_LIBPCRE=YesPlease, so it's been redundant since
e6c531b808 (Makefile: make USE_LIBPCRE=YesPlease mean v2, not v1,
2018-03-11).
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The MKDIR_WO_TRAILING_SLASH and NO_SETITIMER options are no longer
needed on the NonStop platforms as both are now supported by the
oldest supported operating system revision.
Signed-off-by: Randall S. Becker <rsbecker@nexbridge.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The NEEDS_SSL_WITH_CURL flag was still being set in one case, but
hasn't existed since 23c4bbe28e ("build: link with curl-defined
linker flags", 2018-11-03). Remove it, and a comment which referred to
it. See 6c109904bc ("Port to HP NonStop", 2012-09-19) for the initial
addition of the comment.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The NO_R_TO_GCC_LINKER flag was still being on some platforms. It
hasn't been used since my 0f50c8e32c ("Makefile: remove the
NO_R_TO_GCC_LINKER flag", 2019-05-17).
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
ccd469450a (date.c: switch to reentrant {gm,local}time_r, 2019-11-28)
removes the only gmtime() call we had and moves to gmtime_r() which
doesn't have the same portability problems.
Remove the compat gmtime code since it is no longer needed, and confirm
by successfull running t4212 in FreeBSD 9.3 amd64 (the oldest I could
get a hold off).
Further work might be needed to ensure 32bit time_t systems (like FreeBSD
i386) will handle correctly the overflows tested in t4212, but that is
orthogonal to this change, and it doesn't change the current behaviour
as neither gmtime() or gmtime_r() will ever return NULL on those systems
because time_t is unsigned.
Signed-off-by: Carlo Marcelo Arenas Belón <carenas@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "bugreport" tool.
* es/bugreport:
bugreport: drop extraneous includes
bugreport: add compiler info
bugreport: add uname info
bugreport: gather git version and build info
bugreport: add tool to generate debugging info
help: move list_config_help to builtin/help
Recent update to Homebrew used by macOS folks breaks build by
moving gettext library and necessary headers.
* ds/build-homebrew-gettext-fix:
macOS/brew: let the build find gettext headers/libraries/msgfmt
Apparently a recent Homebrew update now installs `gettext` into the
subdirectory /usr/local/opt/gettext/[lib/include].
Sometimes the ci job succeeds:
brew link --force gettext
Linking /usr/local/Cellar/gettext/0.20.1... 179 symlinks created
And sometimes installing the package "gettext" with force-link fails:
brew link --force gettext
Warning: Refusing to link macOS provided/shadowed software: gettext
If you need to have gettext first in your PATH run:
echo 'export PATH="/usr/local/opt/gettext/bin:$PATH"' >> ~/.bash_profile
(And the is not the final word either, since macOS itself says:
The default interactive shell is now zsh.)
Anyway, The latter requires CFLAGS to include /usr/local/opt/gettext/include
and LDFLAGS to include /usr/local/opt/gettext/lib.
Likewise, the `msgfmt` tool is no longer in the `PATH`.
While it is unclear which change is responsible for this breakage (that
most notably only occurs on CI build agents that updated very recently),
https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/pull/53489 has fixed it.
Nevertheless, let's work around this issue, as there are still quite a
few build agents out there that need some help in this regard: we
explicitly do not call `brew update` in our CI/PR builds anymore.
Helped-by: Carlo Marcelo Arenas Belón <carenas@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
GNU/Hurd is another platform that behaves like this. Set it to
UnfortunatelyYes so that config directory files are correctly processed.
This fixes the corresponding 'proper error on directory "files"' test in
t1308-config-set.sh.
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jessica Clarke <jrtc27@jrtc27.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Starting in 3ac68a93fd, help.o began to depend on builtin/branch.o,
builtin/clean.o, and builtin/config.o. This meant that help.o was
unusable outside of the context of the main Git executable.
To make help.o usable by other commands again, move list_config_help()
into builtin/help.c (where it makes sense to assume other builtin libraries
are present).
When command-list.h is included but a member is not used, we start to
hear a compiler warning. Since the config list is generated in a fairly
different way than the command list, and since commands and config
options are semantically different, move the config list into its own
header and move the generator into its own script and build rule.
For reasons explained in 976aaedc (msvc: add a Makefile target to
pre-generate the Visual Studio solution, 2019-07-29), some build
artifacts we consider non-source files cannot be generated in the
Visual Studio environment, and we already have some Makefile tweaks
to help Visual Studio to use generated command-list.h header file.
Do the same to a new generated file, config-list.h, introduced by
this change.
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
* maint-2.23: (44 commits)
Git 2.23.1
Git 2.22.2
Git 2.21.1
mingw: sh arguments need quoting in more circumstances
mingw: fix quoting of empty arguments for `sh`
mingw: use MSYS2 quoting even when spawning shell scripts
mingw: detect when MSYS2's sh is to be spawned more robustly
t7415: drop v2.20.x-specific work-around
Git 2.20.2
t7415: adjust test for dubiously-nested submodule gitdirs for v2.20.x
Git 2.19.3
Git 2.18.2
Git 2.17.3
Git 2.16.6
test-drop-caches: use `has_dos_drive_prefix()`
Git 2.15.4
Git 2.14.6
mingw: handle `subst`-ed "DOS drives"
mingw: refuse to access paths with trailing spaces or periods
mingw: refuse to access paths with illegal characters
...
* maint-2.22: (43 commits)
Git 2.22.2
Git 2.21.1
mingw: sh arguments need quoting in more circumstances
mingw: fix quoting of empty arguments for `sh`
mingw: use MSYS2 quoting even when spawning shell scripts
mingw: detect when MSYS2's sh is to be spawned more robustly
t7415: drop v2.20.x-specific work-around
Git 2.20.2
t7415: adjust test for dubiously-nested submodule gitdirs for v2.20.x
Git 2.19.3
Git 2.18.2
Git 2.17.3
Git 2.16.6
test-drop-caches: use `has_dos_drive_prefix()`
Git 2.15.4
Git 2.14.6
mingw: handle `subst`-ed "DOS drives"
mingw: refuse to access paths with trailing spaces or periods
mingw: refuse to access paths with illegal characters
unpack-trees: let merged_entry() pass through do_add_entry()'s errors
...